As a jiu-jitsu practitioner for the past ten years, I have naturally adopted the mindset of staying calm and seizing opportunities. However, it is difficult to practice the art as regularly as you want as you start to lose muscle memory, rhythm, and accuracy.
In this case, I had to find another sport that instilled the same discipline while outside of my comfort zone.
Enter CrossFit Firefly, a boxing gym I found on Facebook with no website, no significant presence, and no Yelp account. That would be interesting.
Good coaching cues trigger neurons
Ferdinand Thieriot taught my first session with a glassblower who became the trainer and co-owner of Crossfit Firefly. While pointing out my poor form, he eloquently eloquently addressed the small details that kept my arched back and shape fixed during AMRAP exercises.
It's not exactly what he said, but how he said it that made it all click.
It was like dealing with an eccentric fitness guru who spent his time and effort perfecting another person's art of exercising.
His few words opened up a new perspective that resonated with me.
My neurons and nerves fired as I increased the habit of distributing weight on my feet, not just the balls of my feet. And within three weeks during AMRAP WODS I did a series of cleanings with perfect shape.
Building a CrossFit community
Ferdinand runs and owns CrossFit Firefly, which was founded in 2015, with his wife, Tracy Thieriot. Avid Breaking Muscle readers, you recognize Chris Holder's kettlebell tutorial as one of their best resource for form and movement.
While Ferdinand built his career in the fitness industry through great attention to detail, intense self-awareness, and a certain sense of direction, Tracy relied on her fiery creativity and sense of adventure as a major in dance communication and ethnic studies who believes entropy is her standard state. Her modern dance and contact improvisation background led her to find CrossFit and explore other arts such as capoeira and Brazilian jiu-jitsu.
We immediately connected by sharing our experiences in dance and mobility. Tracy says WODS helps her develop a better sense of managing her center of gravity as she explores mobility and movement through her craft.
As a competitive athlete at 5 & # 39; 11 "with an ectomorphic body type, this conversation hit.
CrossFit is an excellent form of exercise for getting in shape and conditioning your body if you are a practitioner who specializes in another art form.
The circular concept of energy transfer
If you've read this far, you may find that Tracy and Ferd are purists who believe in the healing effects of exercise and its impact on community.
They talk about this concept of circle technology – specifically the transfer of energy through support, suffering, cheering, and giving up all pretenses.
It's raw and real.
We've all seen the best and the worst of each other, so we might as well do the real work.
It can be said that the stars were aligned for the CrossFit couple to serve the community through their boxing gym.
If you are being asked by all of your members to stay open throughout the lockdown, how can you not be motivated to fight for the right to keep your doors open?